In autolysis why the destruction of cell membrane not takes place
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
In biology, autolysis, more commonly known as self-digestion,
Explanation:
Autolysis is initiated by the cells' lysosomes releasing digestive enzymes into the cytoplasm. These enzymes are released due to the cessation of active processes in the cell, not as an active process. In other words, though autolysis resembles the active process of digestion of nutrients by live cells, the dead cells are not actively digesting themselves as is often claimed and as the synonym self-digestion of autolysis seems to imply. Autolysis of individual cell organelles can be lessened if the organelle is stored in warm isotonic buffer after cell fractionation.
Answered by
0
Answer:
In biology, autolysis, more commonly known as self-digestion, refers to the destruction of a cell through the action of its own enzymes. It may also refer to the digestion of an enzyme by another molecule of the same enzyme.
Hope it’s helpful
In biology, autolysis, more commonly known as self-digestion, refers to the destruction of a cell through the action of its own enzymes. It may also refer to the digestion of an enzyme by another molecule of the same enzyme.
Hope it’s helpful
Similar questions
Physics,
3 months ago
Math,
3 months ago
English,
3 months ago
Social Sciences,
6 months ago
Computer Science,
6 months ago
Political Science,
11 months ago
Political Science,
11 months ago